Mobile Phones: Still A Hard Nut To Crack

Success in the mobile handset business is akin to a minor league player making it to the big leagues — a long shot. Over the past few years, I have seen many a big player capitulate and get out of the market. Alcatel, Siemens and Sendo come to mind. Others, like BenQ, tried and bit the dust. And the trend continues.

Mitsubishi, known in the U.S. for their automobile brand, facing a maturing market in Japan have decided to shutter their 25-year-old mobile handset business. That makes me wonder, who’s going to hightail it out of Dodge next? Motorola is too obvious and doesn’t count. Any other picks?

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In related news: Engadget reports that iMate, the Dubai-based maker of Windows Mobile phones, has cut most of its U.S. staff after failing to find traction with American carriers.

I agree with you sony and ericsson come to mind as successful , and i think after sony ericsson Put a new version P5I Will be much competition with Nokia N95 8Gb and with Apple Iphone and i think we will enjoy with this Competitionhttp://mobile1club.blogspot.com

I agree with you sony and ericsson come to mind as successful , and i think after sony ericsson Put a new version P5I Will be much competition with Nokia N95 8Gb and with Apple Iphone and i think we will enjoy with this Competition

at least Motorola has been very consistent. every 8 years or so they come out with an excellent, innovative, and extremely popular phone. than nothing for the next 8 years or so.

i am thinking the original brick cell phone, the original flip phone, the startac, the first really small clamshell(forget the name/model number), and the razr. these were all massive hits for 2 or 3 years after release and nothing new(and interesting) for years after.

The issue really stems back to basics. imate is not an OEM and aspire to be but really have no idea what that really means. HTC obviously did all the real heavy lifting and imate’s position since the disolve of that relationship makes it really clear.

If the CEO would put his arrogance and ego aside for a few minutes and allow the leadership team to manage their areas of responsibility while hiring the right competencies necessary to develop solid products and deliver them to market they may stand a chance. He may also want to keep his extra marital affair with his Director of Corporate Affairs and the soap opera that it brings to the workplace in check. She is dead weight and exerts more power than she should ever be allowed since she is clueless about this business and about managing people. Bottomline, they are not people with integrity and treat their “staff” as “expendable” They both need to step aside if this company has a chance in hell.

I agree with you on SE and Apple. I still withhold judgment on HTC. Danger also got out of the market in the nick of time. They were losing money and they were more of a software & services player. hard to put them in the same camp as Alcatel etc.